Neglected posterior interosseous nerve injury

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Abstract

Posterior interosseous nerve (PIN) injury is uncommon due to its anatomically deep location. We report a neglected, rare case of PIN injury presenting the loss of extension of thumb, index, and small fingers with weakness of thumb abduction in a 49-year-old male patient. The patient sustained a penetrating injury to his right forearm caused by a kitchen knife that was repaired primarily through an emergency surgery under general anesthesia. During the regular follow-up on the 52nd postoperative day, the patient presented 20° of extension lags in the right thumb and index finger and 30° in the small finger. Wrist extension was intact, and there was no sensory deficit. We explored the wound and traced the PIN completely, identifying a club-shaped neuroma formation at the proximal cut end of the PIN. Delayed nerve repair was performed with a double-strip cable graft. Hand surgeons should be aware of the probable PIN injury in certain situations of forearm-penetrating injury and perform proper preoperative physical examination to rule out neurovascular deficits. Careful exploration and immediate repair of severe PIN are mandatory, even in emergency situations.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100994
JournalTrauma Case Reports
Volume51
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2024

Keywords

  • Cable graft
  • Posterior antebrachial cutaneous nerve
  • Posterior interosseous nerve
  • Upper extremity

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